Re: [e-users] Doing E-apps

2005-08-21 Thread Michael Jennings
On Thursday, 18 August 2005, at 23:25:20 (-0400), Jesse wrote: > Most (if not all) of e17 appears to be in Standard C. All. > Now, as someone who recently (6 months ago) started learning C++, I > can tell you if you don't know either C or C++ you should really > consider learning C++. If you lea

Re: [e-users] Doing E-apps

2005-08-19 Thread Geoffrey
Jesse wrote: Most (if not all) of e17 appears to be in Standard C. Now, as someone who recently (6 months ago) started learning C++, I can tell you if you don't know either C or C++ you should really consider learning C++. If you learn C++ you're also learning a lot of C (after all C is just "C

Re: [e-users] Doing E-apps

2005-08-18 Thread Rodolfo Hansen
Well, its not too dificult to start describing how C++ has separated from C into pretty much a very different language. C++ templates is a pretty good starting point. But event exceptions, and the OO design options in C++ make writting an 'elegant' program in C++, very different from writting one

Re: [e-users] Doing E-apps

2005-08-18 Thread Jesse
Most (if not all) of e17 appears to be in Standard C. Now, as someone who recently (6 months ago) started learning C++, I can tell you if you don't know either C or C++ you should really consider learning C++. If you learn C++ you're also learning a lot of C (after all C is just "C improved"). C++

[e-users] Doing E-apps

2005-08-18 Thread Gabriel
Hello! What computer-lang should I pick in order to write e apps? What's most efficient? I feel like learning C, but not C++. --- SF.Net email is Sponsored by the Better Software Conference & EXPO September 19-22, 2005 * San Francisco, CA * Dev